WEBVTT DETAILS. ANDRE? REPORTER: STAN, ONE MAN AND THE WOMAN STAYED OUTSIDE. AND THE WHEN COULDN’T GET IN THROUGH THE VICTIM’S FRONT DOOR SURVEILLANCE VIDEO SHOWS , ANOTHER MAN CLIMBING ONTO THE BALCONY AND SLIDING THROUGH A GLASS DOOR LEFT SLIGHTLY OPEN. THE VICTIM TOLD POLICE HE THINKS THEY WANTED OXYCONTIN AND METHADONE. HE NO LONGER KEEPS AT HOME DUE TO PREVIOUS BURGLARIES. THAT IS WHY POLICE WANT YOU TO TAKE A GOOD LOOK AT THIS SURVEILLANCE VIDEO. YOU’LL SEE A SLIM WOMAN. ACCOMPANIED BY TWO MEN. ONE IS NOT SLIM. THE OTHER IS SLENDER. POLICE SAY LAST YEAR JULY THE TRIO SHOWED UP TO AN APARTMENT COMPLEX IN LANSDOWNE. POLICE SAY THE TWO LEAN PEOPLE STAYED OUTSIDE AND THE LARGER MAN WENT INSIDE WEARING A MAS AND HOLDING A GUN. POLICE SAY HE WOKE UP A 67-YEAR-OLD MAN IN HIS BED AROUND 4:00 A.M. AND DEMANDED MONEY AND DRUGS. THE VICTIM SAID HE DIDN’T HAVE ANYTHING. HE HAD LONG THROWN AWAY HIS PRESCRIPTION MEDICATIONS AS AWAY TO DETER THIS TYPE OF BRAZEN HOME INVASION. >> WHEN A SOMEBODY COMMITS SUCH A BRAZEN CRIME AS THIS, CLIMBING ONTO A BALCONY, ENTERING SOMEBODY’S HOME, WAKING THEM UP, DEMANDING DRUGS OR MONEY OR WHATEVER ELSE, IT IS NOT LIKELY THAT IS THE FIRST TYPE O -- TIME THEY HAVE DONE THIS CRIME. IT IS LIKELY THEY HAVE COMMITTED IT BEFORE AND WILL DO IT AGAIN. SO WE NEED TO TAKE THEM OFF THE STREET. REPORTER: SO YOU HELP POLICE DO THAT BY CALLING 410-307-2020 IF YOU RECOGNIZE ANYONE IN THAT SURVEILLANCE VIDEO. THE NUMBER ON YOUR B

Police are still trying to solve an armed home invasion from a year ago. They've released surveillance video of two men and a woman who were behind the break-in.Police said they need your help getting them off the street before they hurt someone. One man and the woman stayed outside.When the suspects couldn't get in through the victim's front door, surveillance video shows another man climbing onto the balcony and sliding through a glass door left slightly open, police said.The victim told police he thinks they wanted Oxycontin and methadone that he no longer keeps at home due to previous break-ins.Authorities said the surveillance video shows a slim woman, accompanied by two men -- one is not slim, the other is slender.In July 2017, the trio showed up to an apartment complex in Lansdowne, police said.The two lean people stayed outside, and the larger man went inside wearing a mask and holding a gun. Police said he woke up a 67-year-old man in his bed around 4 a.m., and demanded money and drugs, police said.The victim said he didn't have anything. He had long thrown away his prescription medications as a way to deter this type of brazen home invasion, police said."It is not likely that that's the first time that person has done this type of a crime. Likely it's been committed before and it's very likely that that person is going to commit that type of crime again, so we need to get we need to take this person off the street before he hurts someone," Baltimore County police spokesperson Officer Jennifer Peach said.Anyone with information is asked to call police at 410-307-2020.

LANSDOWNE, Md. —

Police are still trying to solve an armed home invasion from a year ago. They've released surveillance video of two men and a woman who were behind the break-in.

Police said they need your help getting them off the street before they hurt someone. One man and the woman stayed outside.

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When the suspects couldn't get in through the victim's front door, surveillance video shows another man climbing onto the balcony and sliding through a glass door left slightly open, police said.

The victim told police he thinks they wanted Oxycontin and methadone that he no longer keeps at home due to previous break-ins.

Authorities said the surveillance video shows a slim woman, accompanied by two men -- one is not slim, the other is slender.

In July 2017, the trio showed up to an apartment complex in Lansdowne, police said.

The two lean people stayed outside, and the larger man went inside wearing a mask and holding a gun. Police said he woke up a 67-year-old man in his bed around 4 a.m., and demanded money and drugs, police said.

The victim said he didn't have anything. He had long thrown away his prescription medications as a way to deter this type of brazen home invasion, police said.

"It is not likely that that's the first time that person has done this type of a crime. Likely it's been committed before and it's very likely that that person is going to commit that type of crime again, so we need to get we need to take this person off the street before he hurts someone," Baltimore County police spokesperson Officer Jennifer Peach said.